Samsung is prepping the Galaxy Note Pro for launch.
Samsung Prepping Huge Galaxy Note Pro for UK Pre-orders : Read more
Samsung Prepping Huge Galaxy Note Pro for UK Pre-orders : Read more
Go grab a letter-sized sheet of paper and measure it. It's about 14" diagonal. After you remove the margins, the readable area is about 12" diagonal.Mark my words - this will eventually be the standard size of tablets in the future. The current 10" size is just a concession to the technology not yet being to the point where you can make a 12" tablet that's affordable and lightweight enough to carry everywhere. The readable area of a 10" display is a bit smaller than a National Geographic magazine (text area is 11" diagonal). Which is to say smaller than just about every other magazine out there. ~12" diagonal is the sweet spot - it became the standard for published documents for a reason.7" tablets are taking over the low-end market for the same reason. Their readable area is almost identical to a paperback book's. As with standard letter/A4 sized paper and magazines, the paperback book size became a standard because it was a good compromise between readable area and single-hand holdability.Maybe I'm just a pansy but I thought the 10" was plenty large, it seems to a bit too big for anything I would want/need it for.
Yep, make it a Surface Pro at those dimensions and it's gold.Go grab a letter-sized sheet of paper and measure it. It's about 14" diagonal. After you remove the margins, the readable area is about 12" diagonal.Mark my words - this will eventually be the standard size of tablets in the future. The current 10" size is just a concession to the technology not yet being to the point where you can make a 12" tablet that's affordable and lightweight enough to carry everywhere. The readable area of a 10" display is a bit smaller than a National Geographic magazine (text area is 11" diagonal). Which is to say smaller than just about every other magazine out there. ~12" diagonal is the sweet spot - it became the standard for published documents for a reason.7" tablets are taking over the low-end market for the same reason. Their readable area is almost identical to a paperback book's. As with standard letter/A4 sized paper and magazines, the paperback book size became a standard because it was a good compromise between readable area and single-hand holdability.Maybe I'm just a pansy but I thought the 10" was plenty large, it seems to a bit too big for anything I would want/need it for.